https://github.com/python/cpython/commit/983c7462d65abc82d80345aa4769c1907522f310
commit: 983c7462d65abc82d80345aa4769c1907522f310
branch: main
author: Manoj K M <[email protected]>
committer: ZeroIntensity <[email protected]>
date: 2026-04-20T14:37:12Z
summary:
Docs: Fix some typos in `calendar.rst` (GH-148756)
files:
M Doc/library/calendar.rst
diff --git a/Doc/library/calendar.rst b/Doc/library/calendar.rst
index 54cafaf4fe47d8..2ddef79eab0bfb 100644
--- a/Doc/library/calendar.rst
+++ b/Doc/library/calendar.rst
@@ -54,13 +54,13 @@ interpreted as prescribed by the ISO 8601 standard. Year 0
is 1 BC, year -1 is
.. method:: setfirstweekday(firstweekday)
- Set the first weekday to *firstweekday*, passed as an :class:`int` (0--6)
+ Set the first weekday to *firstweekday*, passed as an :class:`int`
(0--6).
Identical to setting the :attr:`~Calendar.firstweekday` property.
.. method:: iterweekdays()
- Return an iterator for the week day numbers that will be used for one
+ Return an iterator for the weekday numbers that will be used for one
week. The first value from the iterator will be the same as the value of
the :attr:`~Calendar.firstweekday` property.
@@ -86,7 +86,7 @@ interpreted as prescribed by the ISO 8601 standard. Year 0
is 1 BC, year -1 is
Return an iterator for the month *month* in the year *year* similar to
:meth:`itermonthdates`, but not restricted by the :class:`datetime.date`
range. Days returned will be tuples consisting of a day of the month
- number and a week day number.
+ number and a weekday number.
.. method:: itermonthdays3(year, month)
@@ -408,7 +408,7 @@ For simple text calendars this module provides the
following functions.
.. function:: monthrange(year, month)
- Returns weekday of first day of the month and number of days in month, for
the
+ Returns weekday of first day of the month and number of days in month, for
the
specified *year* and *month*.
@@ -446,7 +446,7 @@ For simple text calendars this module provides the
following functions.
An unrelated but handy function that takes a time tuple such as returned by
the :func:`~time.gmtime` function in the :mod:`time` module, and returns the
corresponding Unix timestamp value, assuming an epoch of 1970, and the POSIX
- encoding. In fact, :func:`time.gmtime` and :func:`timegm` are each others'
+ encoding. In fact, :func:`time.gmtime` and :func:`timegm` are each other's
inverse.
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